So if there's a shape that has four equal sides and four equal angles, then it's a square. It's the shape that has those properties. — S
You have GOT to be the WORST epistemological realist EVER!!! — Mww
Even saying if you knew enough is catastrophically inept, because it raises the question....how much is enough. If you knew x and y and from those predicted z, z remains no more than reasonable expectation until some other condition is satisfied, as in, experiment or accident. — Mww
A caveman sees green grass and predicts it is fresh, but only because he has seen brown grass that deer never eat. Just because he knows the grass is green at night, does not allow him to predict the sun is partly responsible for fresh grass. — Mww
Faraday might have the unconfirmed hypothetical for electric lines, but without the rational appeal to a very specific experiment, he would have had no reason to suppose them. And even then, he got it wrong by requiring a medium. — Mww
Yeah, so what? — Mww
That’s what every theoretical physicist says, but I betcha a Benjamin he never calls it a “truth” before it is proven to be one. — Mww
After the fact he can say such and such is true, thus beforehand it was an unconfirmed truth, which is exactly the opposite of what you say. — Mww
Unconfirmed truth is a contradiction in terms. — Mww
No truth is unconfirmed... — Mww
...and that which is either rationally or empirically unconfirmed cannot be a truth. — Mww
That which is true now and will be under congruent circumstance is a necessary truth empirically, or a logical truth rationally. Substantiated hypotheticals can lead to reasonable predictions, but truths absolutely must meet the criteria of knowledge. — Mww
I didn’t say “determine”; I said determinable. Under certain conditions there are things completely undeterminable, and those conditions have to do with human inability. — Mww
This discussion was about realism and possible counter-arguments with respect to it. Knowledge and truth may enter into it but they are qualifiers for what they are. You brought truth here, apparently without understanding what it is. — Mww
A worthy epistemological realist would be quick to realize the limited practical purpose is the sole paradigm from which he can work. The total of practical exercise is indeed very far larger than the arena available to a human, but the totality is quite irrelevant. Hell, we haven’t even got ourselves off this planet yet. But the deeper you go into realism the more you need some kind of idealism, because you’re bound by reason itself to reduce to conditions not met with realism alone. — Mww
Do you know what non-sequitur means, or do you just use any words in any random way that pleases you? A simple statement of observation cannot be a non-sequitur, because non-sequitur refers to a conclusion drawn from previous statements. If you think that my observation is false, then say so, and explain why. But why use fancy words which you don't even know the meaning of? — Metaphysician Undercover
.”Yes, defining our terms is necessary. Without that, philosophy becomes meaningless, muddled gibberish.
If you can’t define it, then you don’t know its meaning, and that supports my claim that it doesn’t have one.” — Michael Ossipoff
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So until I define every term in this sentence, you have no idea what I'm saying.
.”What you’re saying (what you’re asking in your OP question) is meaningless.
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…and, not having a meaning, it also doesn’t have an understandable meaning.’ — Michael Ossipoff
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Yet almost everyone else understood it. How peculiar.
"without an observer, nothing exists"
— ZhouBoTong
To that I simply would say: "how do you know; you haven't been there"? — Janus
No truth is unconfirmed... — Mww
And just to make the point for S, even if "unconfirmed truth" is a contradiction in terms... — ZhouBoTong
The dropped pencil argument is straight out of Hume’s claim of epistemological knowledge given from mere habit or convention. — Mww
You aren’t hearing me. — Mww
You said of blue, the measurable properties x and y means it’s blue. That doesn’t make any sense at all to a guy who claims a thing is blue for no other reason whatsoever than he sees it as blue. — Mww
I see an object as blue therefore that means it is a blue object no matter it’s properties. — Mww
How could what I see as blue mean it’s red? — Mww
Hence, while discoverable properties describe something, such discovery does not always lend itself to meaning. — Mww
What you’re saying by measurable properties x and y means it is blue, is actually x and y are the conditions under which some part of the visual spectrum of EMR must be identified as the same as the sensation of “blue” that is perceived by humans. — Mww
That spectrum has the exact same conditions for blue but may not identify as blue to an animal lacking the similar receptor system as the human animal that labels that part of the visual spectrum “blue”. — Mww
Do you see that the subject of your proposition is “shape”? — Mww
That makes explicit some arbitrary extension in space is necessarily presupposed in order for the conceptions in the predicate to be thereafter associated to something as a means to identity it. It follows if the arbitrary shape is constituted by four equal sides and four equal angles contained in those sides, THEN it is labeled “square”. It is not always necessary to actually quantify anything to perceive a square, insofar as natural knowledge evolution accepts the general conception of “square” without recourse to rulers, but there are still conditions where it is required in order for the label “square” to be at the negation of the possibility of all other shapes, i.e., construction trades, very great or very small distances, etc., or to falsify an optical illusion. — Mww
From this, it is clear that a necessary truth such that any extended shape with its own identifying consistently attributed constituents must be a square. A necessary truth needs no confirmation, it will be the case whether confirmed or not. An unconfirmed truth suggests a possibility of falsification, which requires a means of identity to apodectically resolve. — Mww
No, I didn’t say that. — Michael Ossipoff
“Exist”, “There is”, and “Real”, without context, intended in some absolute way, are meaningless sounds with which philosophers have befuddled themselves for a long time. — Michael Ossipoff
But no one here has been able to answer regarding by what they mean by those words, used in the absolute sense with no specified context. — Michael Ossipoff
But it very clearly isn't. — S
Indeed. Which part of my post suggests that I disagree with that? — ZhouBoTong
Nonetheless, if we were herein engaged in common meanings, we would be writing newspaper articles instead of delving into metaphysical particulars. — Mww
But sufficient reason is not proof, sufficient reason here being gravity, or the mass of the pencil, but that doesn’t say what gravity is or why it acts on objects the way it does. — Mww
No rational agent can deny the existence of real objects — Mww
So it isn’t so much about the negation of existence as it is about the negation of the observer with respect to existence. It’s the same error as defining a word and using the word being defined in the definition. — Mww
I wasn't disagreeing with you as such, I was emphasising that we don't even need an "even if", given that it clearly isn't. — S
Your latest post is exactly what I’ve been saying about your thought experiment since pg 5. You demand acceptance the rock will still exist, but here you merely agree the pencil will fall to the floor because there’s no good reason for it not to. What’s the difference between you saying, “will the pencil drop to the floor? We don’t know for sure....”, and me saying, “will the rock still exist? I don’t know for sure....”. You say it, it's correct; I say it, it’s extreme empiricism. — Mww
I deleted my comment on your big long comment when I saw your comment to Janus. Homie don’ play no schoolyard gangsta games, first of all, plus you’ve completely misunderstood my entire argumentative domain. Where I’m coming from, in case you missed that too.
Here’s how this is going to play out. You’ll say all sorts of mean nasty ugly stuff about me and my pathetic inability to use reason and logic correctly, and I’ll just sit here and think.....oh. Ok. So be it. — Mww
."No, I didn’t say that." — Michael Ossipoff
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If you want to get technical, then yes, you didn't say that. It was logically implied when you said, "defining our terms is necessary". You even quoted yourself saying that.
.That sentence, along with this one, and with the exception of punctuation marks, is composed entirely of terms. Yet I haven't defined these terms I'm using, and nor do I need to, because you obviously understand what I'm saying.
:D You really need to spend a bit more time checking what you’ve written before you post it.” “Exist”, “There is”, and “Real”, without context, intended in some absolute way, are meaningless sounds with which philosophers have befuddled themselves for a long time.” — Michael Ossipoff
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That is completely beside the point, because that's obviously not what I've done. I didn't just say, "Exist" or "There is" or "Real". I asked if there would be a rock in the situation that I described.
.You know what I asked.
.This is getting more and more ridiculous.
.”But no one here has been able to answer regarding by what they mean by those words, used in the absolute sense with no specified context.” — Michael Ossipoff
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Right, and they shouldn't do, as that's a challenge that has no relevance in the context I set for this discussion.
So knowledge that something will happen does not make it "true"? — ZhouBoTong
But if there are no rational agents (S's hypothetical) then no real objects? — ZhouBoTong
if there are no rational agents then we can't even begin to speculate on anything? — ZhouBoTong
Doesn't this reduce any and all speculation about the future to meaningless nonsense? — ZhouBoTong
some speculation is irrational and leads to absurdities — Mww
if there are no rational agents then we can't even begin to speculate on anything?
— ZhouBoTong
Yep. Notice the lack of philosobabble on my part. Pretty cool, ain’t I?
Doesn't this reduce any and all speculation about the future to meaningless nonsense?
— ZhouBoTong
Nope. We humans speculate about the future all the time whether we’re included in it or not. — Mww
.We humans speculate about the future all the time whether we’re included in it or not. — Mww
I think it's a profound mistake to believe that logic alone can tell us anything about the way the world actually is. — Janus
Incorrect. I explained the difference in the text that followed what you quoted from me above. You left out that part.
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I refer you to that part of my post. …the part that spoke of why we usually know what someone means, but why the terms “Real”, “Exist” and “There is” are different in that regard. — Michael Ossipoff
You really need to spend a bit more time checking what you’ve written before you post it.
Yes, you asked if there would be that rock.
Does it occur to you that your question about “Would there be…” used the interrogative conditional form of “There is…”? — Michael Ossipoff
But it cannot be said it is true that any particular something will happen without reasoning from induction, which is insufficient causality for knowledge, or, merely speculating, which has no claim to knowledge at all. — Mww
But if there are no rational agents (S's hypothetical) then no real objects?
— ZhouBoTong
Who knows? Without rational agents, whose left to say anything about anything? — Mww
...with absolute certainty... — Mww
if there are no rational agents then we can't even begin to speculate on anything?
— ZhouBoTong
Yep. Notice the lack of philosobabble on my part. Pretty cool, ain’t I? — Mww
Isn't it more absurd to call that statement absurd? — ZhouBoTong
Aren't you (any sort of strong idealism) just pointing out that we all might be living in The Matrix (or any other related extreme)? — ZhouBoTong
When we use logic it is not the logic which is informing us, we are informing ourselves. So we use logic to find out about things, especially concerning things where we haven't been. — Metaphysician Undercover
So, "the sun will rise tomorrow is an absurdity"? — ZhouBoTong
Aren't you (any sort of strong idealism) just pointing out that we all might be living in The Matrix — ZhouBoTong
A.) So aren't you saying we can speculate on a future with no rational agents, but it would be meaningless?
B.) Well since we can't know for sure there will be rational agents tomorrow, it seems all future thought is just meaningless speculation? — ZhouBoTong
Depends on your philosophical preference. It is usually considered irrational to claim a truth that is technically merely a possibility.
A.) To say an empirical event will occur implies irreversible factual causality. We have knowledge our sun is a star, stars are known to supernova, therefore......you get the picture.
B.) To say an event will occur implies the negation is impossible. If the negation is possible, the statement is false. The correct simple proposition is, the sun should rise tomorrow. Or, simple with qualifiers, all else being given, the sun will rise tomorrow. — Mww
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